Parents' ignorance ruined their children.

Last March, my brother sent a message that "Cui Cui drowned".

Cui Cui had a good time, but she had no choice but to ask the wrong person. At the age of five, she should have gone to kindergarten, but her mother wouldn't let her go because she was afraid that there was no water to drink at school.

Her nightmare should have started when she was seven years old. One day, Cui Cui, a primary school student, was caught in a rainstorm. Her mother didn't come to pick her up, so she went home in the rain and had a high fever at night. It turned out that she was caught in the rain and caught a cold. Her mother was very excited and sent her child to the clinic for an injection, which was out of control. From then on, as long as Cui Cui wakes her nose hard, she will take her for an injection, whether the child is sick or not.

Grandma Cui Cui couldn't bear it. She knelt down in front of her daughter and told her not to take the child for an injection. The child is fine and not sick. But she wouldn't listen and still stuck to her point of view.

At that time, Cui Cui was still a smart and beautiful sister-in-law with sparkling eyes.

I haven't seen Cui Cui since I graduated from high school. According to my grandmother, the girl was crazy and cut her mother with a knife at home.

I always thought her brain was broken because of too many injections. Who would have thought there was another reason?

Once when I came home from school to get clothes, I happened to meet a group of old ladies in the village stuttering melon seeds at my door and chatting gossip. One of them talked about Cui Cui crying at night, which scared her to sleep.

Another echoed, "The last time I went to their house to borrow a hoe, she tried to cut her nun (horse) with a knife."

Grandma gnashed her teeth and said, "That couple is shameless, letting their children see their private affairs, and said they would need it when she got married."

After listening to this, I felt particularly incredible, although I thought Cui Cui's mother was unreliable and there was a more unreliable father.

I asked my grandmother how she knew, and she told me that Cui Cui said it. Later, she also specifically asked Cui Cui's father, who said he was teaching her. Grandma also said that Cui Cui went crazy soon after saying this. She likes to cut her mother with a knife, but she likes to aim at her mother instead of cutting others.

Cui Cui's house is opposite my house. Soon after the Spring Festival, many monks came to their home. Cui Cui's mother warmly entertained them with cakes. Soon, she saw Cui Cui waving a kitchen knife and clamoring to chop them to death. The monks fled in fear, and my father heard the sound. He went out to have a look and shouted at Cui Cui with a kitchen knife: "Put the knife down."

Even though Cui Cui is crazy, she is a wise person. When someone came out of the village, she immediately put down the knife.

As soon as my dad came out, many people in the village came to watch the fun. When asked, they realized that it was Cui Cui's mother who wanted to sell Cui Cui to the temple, saying that she was cleaning the temple. After listening to this, my father called the horses stupid and said they were traffickers.

I don't know how to solve it later. At that time, I only thought that the child should not be crazy, but he was quite clever.

Later, not long after, Cui Cui's mother sent her to a mental hospital. Because Cui Cui was disabled, the government gave her a subsidy. In less than three years, her family built a building and gave birth to a second child.

Within five years, two tile houses were built next to the two-story building, which is said to be for Cui Cui's future marriage.

Cui Cui's mother is a lazy person. She does nothing but eat subsistence allowances. In her thirties, she planted a place to order food.

Cui Cui was sixteen when I got engaged. Her father said that she had found a partner for Cui Cui and asked my father to palm her eyes. The father flatly refused to "don't hurt the child."

I saw a middle-aged man walking through his yard on crutches. I knew he was a fool at first sight, but her father didn't care, saying that fools deserve fools, and no one wronged anyone.

Later, Cui Cui's mother didn't agree to this marriage, and I still think she is open-minded. But my dad said that he went to Cui Cui's mother and said, "When Cui Cui gets married, your family's subsidies will be gone."

After I got married, I came to other places and almost forgot her. It was not until my brother wrote a WeChat that I remembered this poor girl again.

In my memory, she once saw me drooling after eating instant noodles, broke some for her, and she ran home to eat.

Originally, she should be as big as a flower and have a bright future, but she met her ignorant parents. Her life ended at eighteen.